What does Sheldrake mean by 'the science delusion'?
He means the widespread belief that science already understands the nature of reality in principle and that remaining questions are merely technical details — turning science into a dogmatic worldview rather than an open method of inquiry.
What are examples of the 'ten dogmas' he challenges?
Examples include: nature is a machine; matter is unconscious; the laws/constants of nature are fixed; heredity is purely material; memories are stored physically in the brain; the mind is confined to the head; psychic phenomena are impossible.
What evidence does Sheldrake cite to question fixed physical constants?
He points to historical shifts in measured values (e.g., apparent changes in the measured speed of light between 1928–1945 and recent lab-to-lab variations in the gravitational constant 'big G') and a metrologist's remark about 'intellectual phase‑locking' among physicists.
How does Sheldrake propose we rethink consciousness?
He suggests consciousness may not be wholly produced by the brain and might extend beyond it — citing phenomena like the sense of being stared at and proposing perception could involve projecting images outward.
What action does Sheldrake call for from the scientific community?
He urges scientists to question entrenched dogmas, open new lines of research (including on constants and psi), and pursue a 'scientific renaissance' that restores inquiry free from philosophical materialism.